DocumentCode
2497557
Title
Evaluating BIST architectures for low power
Author
Ravikumar, C.P. ; Prasad, N. Satya
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Indian Inst. of Technol., New Delhi, India
fYear
1998
fDate
2-4 Dec 1998
Firstpage
430
Lastpage
434
Abstract
The “system-on-chip” revolution has posed a number of new challenges to the test engineers. We address the issue of high power dissipation during testing, which can reach levels that are beyond the safe upper limit associated with the chosen packaging technology. A study undertaken by Zorian (1993) reveals that test power can be as large as 200% or more in comparison to the normal power. In the test mode, input vectors are normally applied in an uncorrelated manner, leading to an increase in the average Hamming distance between two successive vectors. This implies a larger switching activity, and, for CMOS circuits, implies a larger power dissipation. In this paper, our attempt is to look at Built-in Self-Test (BIST) architectures from the view point of power dissipation, fault-coverage, area, and test length. We report experimental results for a CORDIC chip. Our results indicate that BIST architectures differ significantly from one another in terms of power dissipation, giving the test designer an opportunity to address the problem of excessive heating during testing
Keywords
CMOS digital integrated circuits; built-in self test; digital arithmetic; digital signal processing chips; integrated circuit testing; logic testing; low-power electronics; BIST architectures; CMOS circuits; CORDIC chip; built-in self-test; chip area; excessive heating; fault-coverage; low power operation; power dissipation; test length; test mode; Automatic testing; Built-in self-test; Circuit faults; Circuit testing; Hamming distance; Heating; Packaging; Power dissipation; Power engineering and energy; Switching circuits;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Test Symposium, 1998. ATS '98. Proceedings. Seventh Asian
ISSN
1081-7735
Print_ISBN
0-8186-8277-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ATS.1998.741652
Filename
741652
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